One of the more outsized second order effects occurring in the risk markets right now is the boost Dogecoin (DOGE) is receiving from the carnival atmosphere that is Elon Musk buying Twitter (TWTR).
DOGE is up 30% in the past week but down 500% from last May when DOGE experienced a euphoric ride up only to come crashing down.
It’s no surprise that Musk, through his EV company Tesla (TSLA), owns Bitcoin on its balance sheet and he’s on record lately admitting that Bitcoin is the only cryptocurrency that Tesla owns, and they haven’t sold any.
Personally, he owns Ethereum (ETH) and Dogecoin (DOGE) and he specifically mentions the reason for owning Dogecoin is because he likes dogs.
On the surface, it sounds ridiculous that Musk would speculate on an altcoin just because he likes dogs, but people also thought it was crazy he would buy Twitter for $44 billion.
Musk explained he arrived at the conclusion to buy DOGE through a well-known principle called Occam's razor.
That is a philosophical principle that states the simplest variant is usually the best choice.
He then goes on to explain that he subscribes to a variant of Occam’s razor where the most entertaining variant is usually the best choice.
He is entertained by Shiba Inu dogs so he buys Shiba Inu Alt Coins represented as DOGE coin.
Either way, his association with Dogecoin and Bitcoin has done wonders for its short-term price action with Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies surging.
Perhaps this could be the reason for the short-term stabilization of crypto.
Other factors that could be lifting crypto are U.S. dollar holders looking for alternative assets during the highest inflation in decades; some buying after the American mid-April tax deadline passing; the war in Ukraine and the U.S.’s OFAC sanctioning of Russian bitcoin miners and the ongoing uncertainty about whether the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) might approve spot Bitcoin ETFs in the U.S.
Musk also said last month that he wouldn’t sell his dogecoin, and would also continue to hold bitcoin and ether.
Earlier this year, Tesla began accepting dogecoin for merchandise purchases on its website. DOGE holders could be hoping that Twitter under Musk’s leadership may see more of the same — a use case for the token. Late last year Twitter unveiled a tipping function allowing users to send creators bitcoin.
The way DOGE achieves higher price discovery is for the potential for dogecoin to be given more utility on one of the biggest social media networks once Elon has official control of the company.
Every incremental bit helps.
Imagine DOGE freely mingling in and out of Twitter accounts that highly entertain or Musk floating the idea that for $3, every account can get a blue checkmark which has traditionally signaled a large and influential account.
Paying this $3 using DOGE could be the way that Musk integrates DOGE is onboarded onto the Twitter ecosystem.
Other use cases could also find their way into the DOGE coin ecosystem such as a $5 vanilla Twitter registration fee and with a total addressable market like Twitter and the chance to monetize the platform in a different way, I wouldn’t put it past Musk that he has some sort of plan for DOGE, BTC, or ETH.
Musk has been a huge proponent of free speech and during a Ted Talk interview he said buying Twitter “had nothing to do with economics.”
That thought right there could lead to a one-way avalanche of crypto payments embedded all over his new social media company.
Don’t write off DOGE, the richest man in the world might keep pushing it to the public and we already know that every associated Tweet about it results in a higher price.